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Heath Ledger was great in Knight's Tale
...as was Newman as Rocky Barbella
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Photo from
Balajoe27.wordpress.com
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As sports and acting are both all
about passion and
inspiration, I thought, especially as there isn’t much to say with
conviction
about any NY sports team right now, I thought I’d just share my
thoughts about
the broadcast of the Oscars, a presentation that has a remarkable
record of
being both moving and inspirational.
So the following are just impressions I had while
watching.
The broadcast, all in all,
hit a home run.
It had some new things, a new emcee,
Hugh Jackman, multiple
Oscar winners presenting heartfelt commentary on each candidate’s
performance
and life, and many welcome flashbacks of the great performances of our
time.
There was even some good music, but it may have been a
down
year for that.
The segments just taking
notice of some notable thank-you’s was great too.
But
I could’ve lived nicely if I never saw
Jackman and Beyonce high-steppin’…
The presentation for Best Supporting
Actor was stirring. Cuba Gooding was funny
too, commenting on
Robert Downey Jr.,….”a white man doing a black man in blackface”….very
funny. Christopher Walken was always
bigger than life and still is.
And Heath Ledger as The Joker got the prize…an “enduring
legacy” to be sure, and accepting were his mother and father and
sister….
poignant.
Talk about inspiring
performances…..even if you’re not into Batman.
Will Smith was great in coming out
big-time for action
movies, and the real heroes behind all action movies, visual effects
and sound
editing and film editing. “Slumdog
Millionaire” won some of these…..a precursor
of things to come.
There was Eddie Murphy, back from obscurity and a tribute
to
Jerry Lewis, another hero of my own childhood…he was a Batman for the
kids with
Muscular Dystrophy. I guess.
It’s good
that the Academy recognizes humanitarians.
Lewis was so gracious in his
acceptance that it almost got
me teary-eyed, as were many of the audience for Heath Ledger’s Best
Supporting
Actor. “The movie business…such a joy to be a part of you…”
The “In Memoriam” piece was very touching.
Richard
Widmark was always terrific.
James
Whitmore, Charlton Heston….Sydney
Pollack and Paul Newman, all being remembered and in the background was
“I’ll be
Seeing You”…beautiful…ending with Paul Newman’s piece observing that
the biggest difference
between people being that of those who have had pleasure in love and
those that
haven’t.
There was Reese Witherspoon, looking
better than I’d seen
her in a long time, presenting for Best Director. Danny
Boyle for Slumdog, of course, won and was
jumping up and down, the award received in the spirit of
Tigger…priceless..
There were Sophia Loren,
Halle Berry,
Nicole Kidman, Shirley McLaine and Marion Cotillard…passion,
vulnerability and
depth….very nice indeed.
And Anne
Hathaway got a nice accolade from Ms. McLaine, one well deserved…I can
vouch for
her extraordinary voice…she sang in the Millburn Choir with my Jenna.
There was Halle feting Melissa Leo and
Sophia Loren looked
like one tough broad commenting on Meryl Streep…and her portrayal of a
nun,
while expressing her appreciation for her 15 nominations…quite amazing
indeed…..and
there was Nicole Kidman introducing for Angelina Jolie and Changeling.
The
Oscar went to a breathless Winslet who won for “The Reader”…and that
was some
great whistle and hat from her Dad….
There were many more filmed thank you’s of course, the
funny
from Adrian Brody ("there comes a time in life when everything seems to
make
sense ….and this is not one of those times") and quick hitters such as
those of
Gregory Peck, Dustin Hoffman, crazy Jack Nicholson, “the Duke” John
Wayne and
of course Marlon Brando and David Niven.
Then we got to see Adrian Brody, Bobby
DeNiro, Ben Kingsley,
Michael Douglas and Hannibal Lecter (I mean Anthony Hopkins), leading
men all
for sure. There was Douglas feting
Frank
Langella for
his portrayal of Richard Nixon….DeNiro for Penn….championing human
rights,
"gently reasoning with the Paparazzi" was a great line…there was the
serial
killer Hopkins coming out for Brad Pitt…And Kingsley on Mickey Rourke,
"the bleach
blonde
battered bruiser"…another good line…for The Wrestler…
It was ironic I thought that a sophisticate like Ben
Kingsley should comment on Mickey Rourke, and both were very classy,
but the
Oscar went to
Penn.
Yes, Sean Penn won Best Actor….and deserved it, I guess, even if he was
a bit long-winded in his
acceptance, and ….well, you can’t have everything.
Steven Spielberg wrapped it all up,
quite fitting of course
that the best film maker should present for Best Picture….and for Best
Motion
Picture, there were : Button…Nixon… Milk… The Reader… Slumdog….. all
presented
by interleaving great films of the past with each of the nominated
pictures,
great films all, films that resonated
with the same feelings portrayed by the nominated flicks…all very
tastefully
done.
People capable of anything were reflected from Chinatown and
Frost/Nixon;
prejudice and a sense of destiny from Twelve Angry Men ,
Casablanca and
Forrest Gump as compared to
Slumdog.
There was first love, lost love
and death from The Graduate to The Reader, anger and outrage as
expressed in
movies from Braveheart to Raging Bull and Milk; and finally sense of
loss radiating from
Butch Cassidy and the Godfather and Good Will Hunting to The Curious
Case of
Benjamin Button.
Yes, it was another successful night
for Oscar, giving us
something new while reminding us that even the new derives somewhat
from the old, and maybe that’s a good thing. I
know it was for me.
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